chris: part of why i'm doing this is because i was well enough educated to find out what it was all about and appreciate it. we don't just to teach the history of swords and the history of armor. that's pretty limited. what we try to do is teach history using these as hooks as props and if we can bring them into a wider world through this portal, through this entry point of loving swords or armor, well, that's a great thing. rhea: to see more of christopher poor's work visit his website, armor.com his work is also featured in our area on the ship god's speed, at jamestown settlement, and at the folger's shakespeare library. next, we meet photographer scott baxter, whose found inspiration in the american frontier in arizona. for almost a decade, baxter has photographed over 100 cattle ranchers and their ancestral ranches. he's helped to document the vanishing traditions of america's legendary west. rider: yah, yah, yah . [ whistles ] [ cattle mooing ] scott baxter: some of these ranches we're photographing aren't going to be around because development is gonna find its way in and there's a